Field of Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to the Peripheral Sensor Interface (PSI5) for automotive
sensor applications.
Background of the Invention
[0002] Peripheral Sensor Interface (PSI5) technology represents a standard for data transmission
in automotive safety applications (see www.psi5.org). Originally designed for airbag
applications latest specifications cover additional fields of application like engine
management and vehicle dynamics. Automotive systems or components use the PSI5 interface
for communication between peripheral sensors/actuators and a control unit. PSI5 connects
sensors or actuators to a control unit on the basis of a two-wire cable. The cable
serves both for power supply of the sensors or actuators and for data communication.
[0003] An application of this controller was in the automotive RNC (Road Noise Compensation)
project. The RNC algorithm works with acceleration values coming from the driving
and coupled axles. The accelerations are measured with sensors which use the PSI5
interface as communication, diagnostic and supply voltage. The controller collects
all these acceleration data and transmit them directly and digital, without any losses
of accuracy and other transformations, to the digital signal processor. This DSP will
then calculate the RNC signals to reduce the noise level in the vehicle compartment.
[0004] Another automotive application could be, to get radar information from an PSI5 radar
sensor of the front bumper. These sensors are connected via PSI5 interface to a processing
unit, where a digital signal processor calculates the distance between the front of
the vehicle and pedestrians or any objects.
[0005] However, the usage of data provided by conventional PSI5 controllers is very limited,
since presently any conventional PSI5 controller outputs a data format that is merely
suitable for directly controlling the activation of some means, for example, an airbag
in a vehicle. Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide for means
for using data supplied by a PSI5 controller in response to sensor data in a more
flexible manner as compared to the art.
Description of the Invention
[0006] The above-mentioned object is addressed by a Peripheral Sensor Interface, PSI5, system,
comprising a PSI5 controller and an audio converter configured to receive signals
from the PSI5 controller and to convert the received signals into audio signals. Contrary,
to the art, the inventive PSI5 system, for example, allows for directly outputting
warnings and other information to a driver of a vehicle equipped with PSI5 sensor
technology. Information present in signals generated by the PSI5 controller can, therefore,
be used more flexible than in the art.
[0007] In particular, the PSI5 system may comprise a sensor configured to supply sensor
signals to the PSI5 controller and the PSI5 controller may be configured to supply
the signals received by the audio converter based on the sensor signals. For example,
a pressure or acceleration sensor detects a particular event and signals information
on the detection to the PSI5 controller that in response generates particular signals.
The particular event can be the sudden approach of a pedestrian within some predetermined
distance of the vehicle, for example. The particular signals can in course be converted
by the audio converter into audio signals that can be output to a driver or passenger
of a vehicle wherein the PSI5 system is installed by means of an audio device.
[0008] The inventive PSI5 system may further comprise a digital signal processor, DSP, that
is configured to process the audio signals and to supply the processed audio signals
to an audio device installed in a vehicle. Particularly, the DSP may be configured
to achieve noise reduction and/or echo compensation of the audio signals provided
by the audio converter. The audio converter may comprise a high speed controller and
a time-division multiplexing, TDM, bridge. In particular, the audio converter can
be configured to scale and to filter the incoming sensor data. By this kind of preprocessing
the information provided by the sensors can be adapted properly to the subsequent
processing by the DSP, for example. Thus, sensors can be exchanged by other ones without
the need for exchanging any processing means receiving data from the audio converter.
[0009] According to a particular embodiment the high speed controller and the TDM bridge
are integrated on one single microchip. The PSI5 controller may be integrated on the
same single microchip. More generally, the PSI5 controller and the audio converter
may be integrated in one single microchip thereby providing the advantages of cost
reduction and compact configuration. In fact, herein it is also provided a microchip
on which the PSI5 controller and the audio converter or on which the high speed controller
and the TDM bridge as well as the PSI5 controller are integrated.
[0010] The above-mentioned object is also addressed by a method for outputting an acoustic
message to a driver or passenger of a vehicle, wherein a Peripheral Sensor Interface,
PSI5, system is installed in the vehicle, the PSI system comprising a sensor, a PSI5
controller and an audio converter, comprising the steps
detecting an event (which can be some predetermined event as the sudden approach of
a pedestrian within some predetermined distance of the vehicle, for example) by the
sensor;
supplying sensor signals in response to the detection of the event from the sensor
to the PSI5 controller;
supplying signals from the PSI5 controller to the audio converter in response to the
reception of the sensor signals;
converting the signals received from the PSI5 controller into audio signals by the
audio converter, for example, by means of a time-division multiplexing, TDM, bridge;
and
outputting the audio signals to the driver or passenger.
[0011] According to an embodiment of the method the audio signals are output by the audio
converter to a digital signal processor, DSP, that enhances the quality of the audio
signals by noise reduction and/or echo compensation and supplies the thus enhanced
audio signals after noise reduction and/or echo compensation from the DSP to an audio
device installed in the vehicle for outputting an acoustic message.
[0012] Additional features and advantages of the present invention will be described with
reference to the drawings. In the description, reference is made to the accompanying
figures that are meant to illustrate preferred embodiments of the invention. It is
understood that such embodiments do not represent the full scope of the invention.
Figure 1 illustrates a basic scheme of PSI5 data transmission between a sensor and
a receiver.
Figure 2 illustrates an example of a control system comprising an electronic control
unit with a PSI5 receiver and a plurality of sensors.
Figure 3 illustrates two exemplary configurations of PSI5 technology including an
audio converter.
Figure 4 shows an example for the inventive PSI5 system including an audio converter.
[0013] The present invention relates to PSI5 technology and can be implemented in the context
of standard schemes of data transmission between sensors and the PSI5 interface. According
to the present invention data provided by the PSI5 interface/controller is converted
to audio data that can be output to a driver of a vehicle equipped with the PSI5 technology.
[0014] PSI5 installed in a vehicle, for example, an automobile, may connect sensors or actuators
to a receiver on the basis of a two-wire cable. The cable serves both for power supply
of the sensors or actuators and for data communication. Figure 1 illustrates a basic
scheme of data transmission. A receiver 1 and a sensor 2 are connected to each other
by means of a twisted cable pair 3. The sensor 2 may be a crash sensor as an acceleration
sensor or a pressure sensor. For bidirectional communication specific sync pulse patterns
are used to transmit commands to the sensor, e.g. for sensor addressing in case of
a daisy chain bus, and the configuration of bus devices. The sensor 2 responds within
predefined time slots with current-modulated data.
[0015] As illustrated in Figure 2 a control system may comprise an electronic control unit
(ECU) 4 and peripheral sensors 2. The ECU comprises a PSI5 receiver 1 and a microcontroller
5 connected to each other by a PSI5 interface 6. The receiver 1 may be an ASI transceiver
that provides a pre-regulated voltage to the sensors 2 and reads in the transmitted
sensor data provided by the peripheral sensors. The example above shows a point-to-point
connection for sensor 1 and 2 and two different bus configurations for sensor 3 and
4.
[0016] In principle, Manchester coded digital data transmission can be implemented. The
ECU may transmit so-called "sync pulses" by modulation of the voltage. The sensors
2 respond within predefined time slots with current-modulated data. Alternatively,
data can be transmitted asynchronously wherein data words are sent in specified time
intervals. Sync pulses are not required in this case.
[0017] In the context of the above-described configurations embodiments of the present invention
can be implemented. Two examples for the inventive configuration are shown in Figure
3. According to the upper row of Figure 3 a PSI5 controller 10 and sensors 20 are
connected to each other by PSI5 buses 11. The PSI5 controller 10 is connected via
a data connection 12 to an audio converter 30. The audio converter 30 is connected
via an audio bus 13 to a digital signal processor (DSP) 40. The example shown in the
lower row of Figure 3 differs from the one shown in the upper row by the integration
of the PSI5 controller 10 and audio converter 30 in a single unit 50, for example,
a single microchip. The audio converter 30 is configured to convert signals supplied
by the PSI5 controller 10 into audio signals (for example, 24 bit 192 kHz) that can
be processed by the DSP 40.
[0018] The DSP 40 may comprise a high speed controller and a time-division multiplexing
(TDM) bridge. The DSP 40 may include an Analog-to-Digital converter if the audio converter
outputs an analog audio signal. However, it might be preferred that the audio converter
outputs a digital audio signal. In any case, a digital audio signal may be processed
by the DSP 40 in order to obtain an enhanced digital audio signal. Enhancement refers
to noise reduction and/or echo compensation. The enhanced digital audio signal may
be converted by a Digital-to-Analog converter of the DSP 40 to obtain an enhanced
analog audio signal that can be output by an audio device installed in the vehicle.
Thus, sensor data received by the PSI5 controller 10 from a sensor 20 cause the generation
of PSI5 data by the PSI5 controller 10 and this PSI5 data is converted to audio data
by the audio converter 30 and further processed for outputting by the audio DSP 40.
Thereby, a driver of the vehicle can be given an acoustic warning in response to particular
predetermined kinds of sensor data indicating some security problem, for example.
For example, a warning can be output when distance between the front of the vehicle
wherein the PSI5 system is installed and pedestrians or any objects outside the vehicle
that is detected by appropriate sensors is determined to be below some predetermined
threshold. This predetermined threshold may be a function of the velocity of the vehicle.
[0019] A particular example for the inventive PSI5 system is shown in Figure 4. Sensors
120 send sensor data via PSI5 interface 101 in asynchronous mode to a PSI5 Controller
110. According to the PSI5 standard, asynchronous means that the sensors will automatically
send their data to the PSI5 controller with their own sampling rates. There is no
need for the PSI5 controller in this application to generate a so called SYNC pulse
and the maximum transfer rate of the sensor is always guaranteed. In this example,
the PSI5 Controller 110 is an ELMOS 521.44 controller. This PSI5 Controller is connected
to a high speed controller 130 via a serial interface realized by a universal asynchronous
receiver transmitter (UART) 102.
[0020] The PSI5 controller sends automatically, with a baudrate of about 8Mbit per seconds,
the received sensor data. Moreover initialization data of the internal registers of
the PSI5 controller will also be sent through this connection. The high speed controller
130 is a STM32F4 controller which is an ARM®-Cortex®-M4 - based microcontroller and
will receive these high speed data stream, decodes the protocol and extracts the sensor
data information. Furthermore the controller handles diagnostics tasks, like short-cut
to ground, short-cut to supply voltage, cable break etc. The high speed controller
130 is connected via a synchronous serial data link 103 to a TDM bridge 140. The synchronous
serial data link 103 can be realized by a serial peripheral interface (SPI) bus where
only the data of the sensors will be transmitted. In the shown example, the TDM bridge
140 is an Altera field programmable gate array (FPGA) cyclone including embedded memory,
external memory interfaces and clock management circuitry. The Altera FPGA cyclone
receives the incoming data from the high speed controller, stores the data into its
internal data buffer and transmits the data signals to the following signal processing
unit. In the FPGA, there is also the possibility to scale and to filter the incoming
sensor data to adapt these kinds of information to the following signal processing.
[0021] A particular advantage of this "preprocessing" can be seen in the possibility, that
the sensors can be exchanged by sensors of any other types whereas the following signal
processing can remain unchanged.
[0022] The audio signals are supplied to a DSP 150 via a TDM audio interface 104. In the
shown example, the DSP 150 is an Analog Device AD21469. The DSP can easily receive
and process the sensor data as a synchronous data stream without any additional efforts
for diagnostics tasks etc. The internal audio framework of the DSP can be used without
any adaption to handle the sensor data of accelerometers, for example.
[0023] According to alternative embodiments either the TDM bridge 140 and the DSP 150 or
the TDM bridge 140, the DSP 150 and the PSI5 Controller 110 are integrated on one
single microchip.
[0024] All previously discussed embodiments are not intended as limitations but serve as
examples illustrating features and advantages of the invention. It is to be understood
that some or all of the above described features can also be combined in different
ways.
1. Peripheral Sensor Interface, PSI5, system, comprising
a PSI5 controller; and
an audio converter configured to receive signals from the PSI5 controller and to convert
the received signals into audio signals.
2. PSI5 system according to claim 1, further comprising a sensor configured to supply
sensor signals to the PSI5 controller and wherein the PSI5 controller is configured
to supply the signals received by the audio converter based on the sensor signals.
3. PSI5 system according to claim 1 or 2, further comprising a digital signal processor,
DSP, configured to process the audio signals and to supply the processed audio signals
to an audio device installed in a vehicle.
4. PSI5 system according to claim 3, wherein the DSP is configured to process the audio
signals for noise reduction and/or echo compensation.
5. PSI5 system according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the audio converter
comprises a high speed controller and a time-division multiplexing, TDM, bridge.
6. PSI5 system according to claim 5, wherein the high speed controller and the TDM bridge
are integrated on one single microchip.
7. PSI5 system according to claim 6, wherein the PSI5 controller is integrated on the
one single microchip.
8. PSI5 system according to one of the claims 1 to 4, wherein the PSI5 controller and
the audio converted are integrated on one single microchip.
9. PSI5 system according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the sensor is a pressure
sensor or an acceleration sensor.
10. Method for outputting an acoustic message to a driver or passenger of a vehicle, wherein
a Peripheral Sensor Interface, PSI5, system is installed in the vehicle, the PSI system
comprising a sensor, a PSI5 controller and an audio converter, comprising the steps
detecting an event by the sensor;
supplying sensor signals in response to the detection of the event to the PSI5 controller;
supplying signals from the PSI5 controller to the audio converter in response to the
reception of the sensor signals;
converting the signals received from the PSI5 controller into audio signals by the
audio converter; and
outputting the audio signals to the driver or passenger.
11. Method according to claim 10, further comprising
supplying the audio signals from the audio converter to a digital signal processor,
DSP;
enhancing the quality of the audio signals by noise reduction and/or echo compensation
by the DSP;
supplying the audio signals after noise reduction and/or echo compensation from the
DSP to an audio device installed in the vehicle for outputting.
12. Method according to claim 10 or 11, wherein the audio converter converts the signals
received from the PSI5 controller into the audio signals by means of a time-division
multiplexing, TDM, bridge.
13. Method according to claim 12, wherein the TDM bridge scales and filters sensor signals.
14. Microchip comprising a PSI5 controller and an audio converter.
15. Microchip according to claim 14, wherein the audio converter comprises a high speed
controller and a time-division multiplexing, TDM, bridge.